An exciting and tender coming-of-age story about friendship, family, and the forces that shaped Irish women’s reproductive rights.
It’s 2023, and Saoirse has left the house after an argument with her boyfriend about whether or not to have children. Wandering the streets of Dublin, she ducks into the train station when it starts to rain. While sitting on a bench, she notices a photograph dropped by a stylish elderly woman as she hurries to catch her train. Intrigued, Saoirse picks up the photo and follows the woman onto the train, which is headed to Belfast. By the time she returns the picture, the train has started moving, and Saoirse winds up staying on it, listening to the woman, Maura Flynn, tell the story of her friend Bernie and the events leading up to the photo that was taken of them exactly 52 years ago. Maura worked as a shopgirl in Dublin in the late 1960s, and was thrilled when the dashing Dr. Christopher Davenport showed up to her counter at Switzers department store and asked to take her to the pictures. Soon after they married, however, his charming demeanor gave way to an uncontrollable temper and the perfect life she had imagined for herself quickly turned into a nightmare. Maura’s only lifeline was the other woman in the photograph Saoirse found on the platform: Bernie, a butcher’s wife and devoted yet harried mother of three. Together the two friends navigated marriage, family, and the struggles of being women in Ireland in the 1960s and ’70s. Bernie and Maura’s lives became intertwined with those of other women, including a dressmaker who altered dresses by day and secretly assisted women who didn’t want to be pregnant in the off hours. They grew both closer to each other and to the dangers that threatened them in their society. Inspired by Maura and Bernie’s story, Saoirse returns to her life in the present day with determination to change it for the better.
An inspiring novel about the liberating paths blazed by Irish women.